Chapter 689: Finding a place to rest
Nathan walked north through Minato’s streets at a steady pace and let the town move around him.
It was loud in the way that places without rules tended to be loud — not the organized noise of a city going about its business but the layered, overlapping sound of people doing exactly what they wanted without anyone telling them otherwise. Music from open doorways. Arguments conducted at full volume in the middle of the street without either party feeling any urgency to resolve them. The smell of food from a dozen different carts mixing into something that was interesting from a distance and slightly overwhelming up close.
He kept his eyes forward and moved through it.
The problem of the gate was sitting at the back of his mind.
He had beheaded one of Morosuke’s men publicly, at the entrance to the town, in front of a line of travelers who had all subsequently scattered in several directions. That information was in Minato now, moving through it the way information moved through close-packed places — fast, mouth to mouth, picking up details and losing accuracy with each passing, but retaining the essential shape of the event. A dark-haired ronin. A man without a head. The entrance to Minato unmanned because everyone at it had run.
That was not the arrival he had planned.
He had wanted to come in as nothing — another traveler, another figure passing through, unremarkable and un-discussed. Instead he had announced himself at the gate and the announcement had teeth.
Which meant when he walked into Morosuke’s estate and said he had questions, the man was going to be answering them from a position of already knowing what kind of evening his entrance guards had experienced.
That could go several ways.
He was still thinking through which way was most likely when the comments started.
"Look at him—"
"He is so handsome, my goodness—"
"He looks young too, is he actually a ronin?"
"Does it matter? Look at those eyes—"
"He has something foreign about him, don’t you think? That mix is extraordinary—"
Nathan kept walking.
The voices came from either side — women at doorways, women at market stalls, a group of three near a food cart who had stopped their conversation entirely and were conducting a new one at a volume that suggested they were not particularly concerned about whether he heard. Their assessment was favorable and they were not keeping it to themselves.
The men in the street who noticed him had a different register entirely — the hard sideways looks, the muttered words that carried the specific contempt that certain men directed at anyone who didn’t fit cleanly into the categories they had organized the world into. Half this, half that. Neither one thing nor another.
The women seemed not to share the objection. If anything the mix appeared to work in precisely the opposite direction — the foreign quality interesting rather than offensive, the dark hair and the dark eyes and the particular combination of features landing as something they found worth commenting on at length.
Several of them made their interest considerably more explicit than comments.
Nathan ignored all of it and kept moving.
Within four minutes the attention had become impractical — new groups forming at each block, the interest spreading ahead of him as word moved faster than he was walking. He turned at the next corner and went up.
His sandals found the first roof’s edge, he pushed off, and then he was moving above it all — building to building, ridge to ridge, the rooftops of Minato passing beneath him at a pace that left most eyes with nothing to track except the impression that something had moved. The town spread in every direction from above, the harbor’s dark water visible to the south, the maze of streets and alleys between the buildings mapped out from this angle in a way that made navigation simple and direct.
He moved north and let the distance dissolve quickly.
Ten minutes by rooftop brought the structure into view.
He stopped on a roof two dozen meters out and looked at it properly.
The old soba man had called it a fortress and the description was accurate in the way that mattered — not a castle, not anything built with the architectural intention of genuine military fortification, but a building that communicated the same basic message that fortresses communicated, which was that the person inside had enough men and enough willingness to use them that the building didn’t need to be elegant about it. It was large, considerably larger than anything surrounding it, built in successive additions that had clearly been funded at different times and hadn’t been concerned with aesthetic consistency.
Around it, men.
At the entrance, along the outer walls, at the corners, in the narrow passage between the estate and the building beside it — everywhere Nathan looked there were men carrying katanas or lances with the loose, proprietary ease of people who had been given weapons and a purpose and had stopped thinking very hard about either.
Not soldiers. Not trained. But numerous.
Nathan considered briefly.
He wanted information, not a fight. One question answered correctly was worth more right now than every armed man in that courtyard. He walked down from the rooftop, dropped to street level at a point where no one was watching the specific patch of shadow he chose, and approached the entrance from the front at a normal walk.
The four men at the gate were deep in a conversation that had apparently been generating consistent amusement for some time — the laughter genuine, comfortable.
They saw Nathan when he was twenty feet out.
The laughter stopped.
The reassessment was fast and visible — four sets of eyes moving across him in the practiced way of people who spent their days evaluating arrivals and had developed opinions about what different appearances indicated. The dark kimono. The black scabbard. The face, the posture, the particular quality of someone walking toward a guarded entrance without slowing and without any readable concern about what the entrance contained.
Ronin so dangerous
"Stop!"
Nathan kept walking.
"I said stop—!" One of them leveled a lance, the point coming forward to occupy the space between them, and Nathan stopped.
He looked at the lance briefly. Then at the man holding it.
"I am not here for a fight," he said. "I want to speak with your chief. Morosuke."
The four men looked at each other.
Then they laughed.
It started with one of them — a short, sharp sound — and spread immediately to the others, the laughter of people who had found something they found genuinely funny and weren’t interested in hiding it.
"Listen to him!"
"He wants to speak with Morosuke he says!"
"Who do you think you are, walking up here and saying that?"
"Do I need to be someone to have a conversation?" Nathan asked.
"Isn’t that obvious?" The nearest one glared at him, the laughter settling into something harder.
Nathan reached into his kimono.
He took out a gold coin and held it between his fingers where the lamplight caught it.
All four men went quiet at the same moment. Their eyes went to the coin with the unified attention of people who had spent their lives in a town where a gold coin represented several months of comfortable living and had never had one appear in their immediate vicinity without significant effort being involved in obtaining it.
"I want to speak with Morosuke," Nathan said. "It won’t take long. I will offer gold for information if he gives me what I need. Go and tell him."
The four of them looked at each other.
The calculation was visible on their faces — the coin against the inconvenience, the inconvenience against the coin. Simple arithmetic.
One of them shrugged.
"Lord Morosuke isn’t here tonight," he said. "Come back tomorrow. He will be here then."
Nathan looked at him.
He held the look for a moment — reading the man’s face, the eyes, the specific quality of whether this was an easy deflection or an actual statement about where their lord was.
It was true. The man wasn’t performing it.
With a resigned look, Nathan turned around.
Tomorrow then. One night in Minato, one more morning, and then this question was answered and he was moving.
"Hey—!" A hand came from behind, reaching for his shoulder, the voice carrying the indignant energy of someone who had just realized a gold coin had been displayed and had not transferred to them. "That gold was for the answer—"
Nathan’s hand moved without looking.
His fingers closed around the wrist before it reached his shoulder — found it cleanly, turned it slightly, applied pressure at the specific point where the bones had their conversation with each other.
"Guhhh—!"
The man froze. The sound came out compressed and involuntary, the sound of pain arriving before the decision to make noise about it. He looked at his own wrist in Nathan’s grip with the expression of someone who had touched a hot surface and was now very still, waiting to understand the full extent of what they had done.
Nathan held it for a moment.
Long enough for the message to be received completely.
Then he let go.
The man pulled his wrist back and cradled it against his chest and said nothing further and did not move just looking at Nathan fearfully.
Nathan put the gold coin back in his kimono and walked away from the estate into Minato’s streets without saying anything else leaving the four men gritting their teeth.
But Nathan couldn’t care less, he just needed somewhere to sleep.
Nathan walked back into Minato’s streets and looked for an inn.
This proved more difficult than it should have been.
The problem was not scarcity — Minato had businesses everywhere, every other building carrying some kind of commercial activity, the town’s ungoverned nature having produced a dense and varied economy that operated entirely on its own logic. The problem was legibility. In an ordinary town the signs and the architecture and the general arrangement of things communicated their purpose clearly enough. In Minato the categories had been shuffled. Buildings that looked like they might be gambling dens turned out to be food establishments. Buildings that looked like food establishments turned out to be something else entirely. Twice he stopped in front of a place that seemed to have the right characteristics and reassessed on closer inspection.
He was still looking when his arm was caught.
A hand closed around his forearm from the left — light, not aggressive, the touch of someone making an offer rather than a demand — and he turned.
The woman was pretty in the specific way of someone who had learned to arrange everything about their appearance with great care and had been doing it long enough that the arrangement looked natural. Black hair, a kimono in deep red, the particular kind of smile that was simultaneously warm and professional in a proportion she had clearly calibrated over time.
"Hey, handsome," she said. "Want some sweet time with us?"
Nathan looked past her briefly.
Several other women were arranged in the background at a comfortable distance — in a doorway, near a low wall, their attention on him with the same mixture of warmth and professional assessment. The picture assembled itself without any need for additional information.
"I’m looking for somewhere to sleep," he said.
She giggled. She pointed over her shoulder at the building behind her.
It was well-maintained. Better maintained than most things on this street, actually — the wood clean, the lamp at the entrance recently oiled, the entry curtain the kind that had been replaced within the last season. Clearly a place that had income and spent some of it on the premises.
It was also clearly not a place whose primary service was sleeping.
"You’ll find the perfect place right here," she said.
"I want to sleep," Nathan said. He said it with the flat specificity of someone clarifying a term in a contract.
She looked at him for a moment — assessing, the professional eye running over him with the speed of long practice — and then smiled again, differently this time, the warmth more genuine.
"Fine," she said easily. "You can sleep too if you want. Come."
Her hand stayed at his arm, not gripping but present, guiding him toward the entrance. Nathan looked at the building once more and then looked at the street he had been walking for the last twenty minutes without finding what he was looking for.
He went with her.
The interior was exactly what the exterior had suggested — well kept, properly maintained, the kind of place that invested in its appearance because its business depended on the impression it made. Clean floors, good lamps, the smell of incense over everything doing its patient work of making the air more pleasant than it would otherwise be. A wide entry room opened ahead of them, and the moment Nathan stepped through the curtain the attention arrived.
"Nana! Where did you find this one—"
"He’s extraordinary—"
"Those eyes! Look at those eyes!"
"So much better than Morosuke’s men, those vile things—"
The voices came from several directions at once — women at various points in the entry room, some descending a staircase, some emerging from a side corridor, all of them converging their attention on Nathan with the enthusiastic collective energy of people who had been presented with something they found genuinely exceptional and were not keeping their opinions to themselves.
Nana’s smile carried a proprietary warmth.
"Leave him alone," she said, her voice affectionate but firm, pulling Nathan’s arm slightly closer to her side as she navigated through the attention. "He only wants to sleep."
A collective sound of disappointment that was also partly amused — the specific sound of people who had accepted a situation they found unnecessary and were registering that opinion for the record.
Nana guided him up the stairs.
The corridors above were narrow and warm, the lamps here lower, the light amber and close. As Nathan walked through them his ears, sharp and quiet in the surrounding noise, caught the sounds coming from behind the closed doors on both sides — the various sounds of the establishment’s primary business being conducted, present and continuous through the thin walls.
He looked forward and kept walking.
Nana stopped at a door near the corridor’s end and slid it open, standing aside.
The room was small and clean. A sleeping mat properly arranged, a low table, a lamp, a window that looked out over a narrow gap between buildings to the street below where the town’s noise continued its uninterrupted work. Better than a roof tile, which had been his other option.
"Your name?" she asked, looking at him with the direct curiosity of someone who asked questions because they actually wanted the answers.
"Ryo," he said.
"Ryo-sama." She tried it once, the way people tried new names, seeing how it sat. She smiled — the genuine version, not the professional one. "If you find yourself wanting any kind of company tonight, please call for me first." She leaned forward and pressed her lips to his cheek lightly, the gesture carrying no demand in it, simply delivered and complete.
Nathan looked at her.
She had a boldness to her that was honest rather than calculated — the confidence of someone who knew exactly what they were and had long since stopped apologizing for any of it. He found himself faintly amused by it without entirely meaning to be.
He reached into his kimono and found a gold coin and held it out.
Nana’s hand came up automatically to receive it and then her eyes went to what was sitting in her palm and the practiced ease stopped.
She stared at it.
The gold caught the lamp’s light and returned it cleanly, the coin’s weight sitting in her hand with the specific gravity of something worth considerably more than anything the evening had suggested it might contain.
She raised her eyes.
The door was already closed.
Nana stood in the corridor with the gold coin and the closed door and the muffled sounds of the building around her, and looked at the wood grain of the door for a moment with a shocked and disbelief expression.
